Born in the Cattle: Aborigines in cattle countryThe Aboriginal stockman in cowboy hat, brightly coloured shirt, jeans and riding boots, is a familiar sight in much of outback Australia. Yet, white Australia has largely excluded Aborigines - men and women - from its national legends. Born in the Cattle tells the story of Aboriginal involvement in the northern cattle industry. It shows how the Aboriginal people excelled at this 'no shame job', how they incorporated it into their world, how they used it to stay on their own land with their kin. Combining new skills with old, they shaped a unique Aboriginal cattle country - and thereby made a major contribution to the economy of Australia's north. Using oral evidence which enables Aboriginal perspectives to emerge in a way not previously possible, Born in the Cattle is a major work of social history, the first to describe the texture of everyday life and work in the outback north before World War II. The story begins with the battle for the waterholes, describes the skills the Aboriginal people brought to work with cattle, reveals for the first time the important role of Aboriginal women, and explores in a new way the complex pattern of relationships between white and black in the outback. 'To protect their country and its people, Aborigines had to teach station whites many things. Aborigines worked the stations; they managed the land in new ways, though following old principles. They have made the cattle industry their own; they are still the majority of those living on northern pastoral stations, and their dynamic culture leaves a distinctive mark on bush life...' |
From inside the book
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Page iv
... Frontier and pioneer life - Australia , Northern . I. Title . 994.29'0049915 Set in 10.5 / 12pt Garamond by Graphicraft , Hong Kong Printed in Hong Kong by Dah Hua Printers Contents Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction 1 The ...
... Frontier and pioneer life - Australia , Northern . I. Title . 994.29'0049915 Set in 10.5 / 12pt Garamond by Graphicraft , Hong Kong Printed in Hong Kong by Dah Hua Printers Contents Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction 1 The ...
Page 7
... frontier conflict as a war , a ' wild time ' , with the whites and blacks ' fighting together ' . Jack Sullivan , retired Aboriginal stockman , told of a clash between the Ngarinman people and whites between Rosewood and Argyle Downs in ...
... frontier conflict as a war , a ' wild time ' , with the whites and blacks ' fighting together ' . Jack Sullivan , retired Aboriginal stockman , told of a clash between the Ngarinman people and whites between Rosewood and Argyle Downs in ...
Page 9
... frontier expansion in the 1870s , thirteen stations and other outposts had been established , including Ran- kin and Lorne's station and Rocklands . Less than eight years after the first pastoral incursions , Rocklands , Lawn Hill ...
... frontier expansion in the 1870s , thirteen stations and other outposts had been established , including Ran- kin and Lorne's station and Rocklands . Less than eight years after the first pastoral incursions , Rocklands , Lawn Hill ...
Page 10
... frontier resistance , meant high risks for the colonisers . Although ' native trackers ' were employed , there were few police and no comprehensive strategy to control Territory Aborigines . No native police force ever operated ...
... frontier resistance , meant high risks for the colonisers . Although ' native trackers ' were employed , there were few police and no comprehensive strategy to control Territory Aborigines . No native police force ever operated ...
Page 12
... frontier warfare were evident in the landscape of people , dwell- ings and site - related myths . Resource and culture conflict were evident at old Wollogorang homestead : its doors had a porthole for viewing attackers and firing rifles ...
... frontier warfare were evident in the landscape of people , dwell- ings and site - related myths . Resource and culture conflict were evident at old Wollogorang homestead : its doors had a porthole for viewing attackers and firing rifles ...
Contents
1 | |
24 | |
3 Stockcamp and House | 49 |
Picture section | 52 |
4 Black Velvet | 68 |
Picture section | 84 |
5 Tame Blacks? Paternalism and Control | 95 |
Picture section | 116 |
6 Workin Longa Tucker | 122 |
7 No Shame Job | 145 |
Oral History and Writing about Aborigines | 176 |
Endnotes | 179 |
Select Bibliography | 193 |
Index | 195 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abori Aboriginal employees Aboriginal society Aboriginal women animals areas Arnhem Land Australian became black women Blan Bleakley Report Bonrook Borroloola boss boys bush tucker Canberra cattle industry cattle station cattle-spearing ceremonies Chief Protector clothing colonial Cook Creek CRS A1 culture Daly River Darwin diary dreaming drovers Durack European female flour frontier ginal gines girls half-caste Harney head station Herbert homestead horses hunting Jack Sullivan July Koolpinyah Kununurra labour Land Claim Laurie lived male manager's missus Mudbura murder mustering native never Ningbing Northern Standard Northern Territory NTPLA part-Aboriginal pastoral pastoralists police Queensland relationships ritual sexual Shaw social sometimes spear Stanner station Aborigines station camp station managers stockcamp stockmen stockwork stories Sullivan supplies Sydney tion traditional travelling tribal tucker Vesteys Victoria River Downs violence wages Wagiman walkabout Warlpiri waterholes Wave Hill white women woman workers Xavier Herbert yard young